Saturday, March 10, 2012

What's Food For You

Anyone who knows me can attest my love for food. In fact, I can almost eat just about anything (yes, anything mind you) for as long as it doesn't border the too exotic. You can just take a look at my almost obese figure and understand how a 5-foot tall girl can store tons of food in her system. As a full-fledged night creature, I go to sleep every night excited to wake up because I look forward to having breakfast in the morning. That's how pressingly I love food. 


But I don't just love food. In my college years, I developed a knack for cooking. That, which was triggered and gradually stirred by no less than cooking shows in Lifestyle Network, Travel and Living, Asian Food Channel and the like. From Barefoot Contessa to Giada de Laurentis to Wolfgang Puck to Jamie Oliver to Bruce Lim to whomever shows I flip through. I didn't always have time to work on my technique and come up with a variety of concoctions to have people try and critique but I always had my share of practice come holidays (3 years running, or that which I could remember). I become the resident chef who prepares an entire meal for a party of 4, festive enough to last post-holiday dinners with leftovers and remakes of the recipes I was able to pull off. 


On my first year as the cook, I focused on the easy, no-brainer pasta. I remember making my first ever puttanesca, coupled with a main entree of buttered shrimp and a dessert of the passe mango float. You could say that I was a chef on a whim, pretending to be inventive and a pretentious chef who knows nothing about combination or the appeal to the palate. But the pasta ended up being too salty because I overused the anchovies and from there it was history. 


Second year as the cook, I planned on a Greek/Persian Christmas platter with salads and gyro stuff when I discovered the wonders of the yogurt shawarma sauce. I ended up doing roastbeef sandwiches (this got an A-grade) and kebabs (B+) which were then complemented by my mom's sweet roast chicken. 


Last year, I took my cooking skills up a notch by trying some heavy gourmet meal. I cooked sundried tomato pasta, steak with asparagus and potato gratin. My friends and I would always have these in reunions and it was about time to bring it to my family. (Sorry for the poor lighting of the photos)


 Pasta with sundried tomatoes and chili flakes 

Tenderloin steak with asparagus and potato gratin

Now to take this a step further, my parents, friends and I have recently become 'foodies' on a quest. Not so much critique food for a living but to extensively scavenge the streets of Manila and the tourist destinations that we go to for the best they have to offer. With the advent of Instagram and Twitter, that host the wild evidence of weight gain and food pornography, I can easily share snapshots of the restaurants I visit. The combinations that I taste and leave lasting impressions then become an inspiration and instruments to the next cuisine experiment that I will venture. 

So, with this I will now begin to embark on a new culinary adventure. I'm toying with the idea of doing food business as a sideline (seeing that my business Caja has been put on hold indefinitely). My first trial will be tentententen: MOCHI BALLS. Googled the recipe and it's selling like pancakes in night and weekend markets, plus it looks very easy to make (or I hope so). I'm giving it a try this summer and will offer it to my friends and officemates so they can enjoy the heat with a cool and delectable dessert. 

Updates on that soon. 

Toodles! :)

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